Santa Mission (also: Santa Aratak[2] or Santa Aratack[5]) is a village in the Essequibo Islands-West Demerara Region of Guyana. Santa Mission is mainly inhabited by Lokono Amerindians.[1] The village is located on the Kamuni Creek, a tributary of the Demerara River.[6] The village of Hopetown, an early Chinese settlement, is located about 15 kilometres (9.3 mi) from Santa Mission.[7]
Overview
Santa Mission was founded in 1858 by Alfred Patterson, a lumberjack who was looking for Wallaba trees (Eperua falcata). The village is built on white sand hills along the blackwater Kamuni Creek.[1]
The economy of Santa Mission is based on tourism, craft making, and logging.[2] The village has a Nursery and Primary school,[1] a healthcare centre,[6] and a local library.[3] In 2008, the festivities of the Amerindian Heritage Month were held in Santa Mission.[3] As of 2015, it was the only indigenous village in Essequibo Islands-West Demerara with titled land.[1]
Sights
Located on top of the hill is a giant silk-cotton tree. During the Dutch colonial era, the tree was used a navigation aid on the Demerara River. In the Lokono language, the tree is called Kamaka which means "mother of all trees."[1] There is a village monument dedicated to the past toshaos (village chiefs) and a kamuni Women Craft shop.[8] Near the village is the Arrowpoint Nature Resort, a privately owned tourist resort with its own nature reserve.[9]
Transport
Santa Mission does not have a connection to the road network and can only be accessed via the river.[1] Arrowpoint Nature Resort operates a ferry service from Timehri (Cheddi Jagan International Airport) which makes a stop at Santa Mission.[9] The journey will take between 45 minutes and one hour.[1]
Hopetown flourished and peaked at 800 people in 1874.[7] The economy was mainly based on charcoal production. When the demand dwindled, many Chinese moved to other towns.[11] By 1914, about a third of the population was non-Chinese and there were only 46 Chinese left.[7]
References
^ abcdefghMariah Lall (20 September 2015). "Santa Mission". Stabroek News. Retrieved 1 December 2021. Santa Mission had just celebrated its 157th anniversary